This application claims priority to Israel Patent Application No. 210014 filed on 15 Dec. 2010, the contents of which are incorporated herein, in their entirety, by this reference.
Embodiments of the present invention are directed toward composite ballistic armor, and especially to armor comprising layers of pellets made of high density material, to provide protection against incoming projectiles, for use as stand-alone armor or as add-on armor.
Ballistic armor of the kind to which embodiments of the present invention refer is disclosed, for example, in WO 2010/053611, and it comprises two armor layers of ceramic spheres, held within a matrix of polymeric material in order to distribute kinetic energy and momentum from the impact of a projectile across a greater area.
IL 163183 discloses another armor which comprises a plurality of longitudinal members in a tightly packed array, wherein the members are mutually spaced apart from one another forming a continuous gap in the array.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,813,281 discloses a composite flexible armor comprising layers of rigid platelets separated by compressible foam material having gas cells therein. A high velocity projectile striking a platelet in one layer compresses and forces gas from the cells in the foam material to absorb and dissipate kinetic energy.
According to one aspect of the presently disclosed subject matter, there is provided a ballistic structure comprising a front pellet layer configured to face a ballistic threat and rear pellet layer therebehind, each of the pellet layers comprising a plurality of pellets, which can be made of a ceramic material, having cylindrical bodies with their height axes in both layers being parallel to each other, the pellets being arranged in a honeycomb pattern within a binder matrix, the pellet layers being codisposed such that all interior spaces (i.e., spaces which are surrounded on all sides by pellets) of each pellet layer are entirely overlapped by an area of the other pellet layer that is free of such spaces, the two layers being by an intermediate layer having such a width and being made of such a material as to allow the rear layer to rigidly support the front layer.
Some of the pellets in each layer can be in contact with adjacent pellets of the same layer.
A majority of the pellets in each layer can be in contact with adjacent pellets of the same layer.
The pellets can comprise belts, so that each belt surrounds a corresponding pellet and configured for confinement thereof.
The belt member according to an embodiment of the present invention may be made of a variety of materials so long as the belt member possesses a minimal amount of tensile strength, which is at least about 3 kg/mm2. Possible materials include, but are not limited to, metal alloys such as Aluminum, Titanium and Steel alloys, composites such as glass, carbon and aramids, Kevlar™, high strength plastics such as Nylon, polycarbonates, and polyamids, High Density Poly-Ethylene (HDPE) within various resins, carbon fibers and the like. The various resins may include simple fabric, winded fabrics, or mats reinforcement resins.
The intermediate layer is configured to provide structural confinement to the front and rear layers.
The binder matrix can be rigid or flexible, in which case the entire structure can be flexible.
The distance between the pellets of each layer can be no greater than 0.3 mm.
The front and rear pellet layers, and the intermediate layer can be formed within a single binder matrix, or each of the front and rear pellet layers can be within a binder matrix separate from that which the other of the layers is within.
The ballistic armor can be formed such that the distance between the front and rear layers does not exceed 0.15 times the diameter of each pellet.
Centers of pellets in each of the pellet layers can overlap with points of contacts of pellets in the other of the pellet layers.
Each of the layers can be offset, relative to the other of the layers, along a row thereof by a distance equal to one half of the diameter of one of the pellets.
The intermediate layer can be made of ballistic fabric or metal or the material of said binder matrix.
The cylindrical bodies of the pellets can each have parallel height axes and be of the same diameter.
The binder matrix can be made of a thermoplastic material.
The pellets of the front pellet layer can be of a higher hardness than the pellets of the rear pellet layer.
The pellets can be made from a material selected from the group consisting of alumina, silicon carbide, boron carbide, ultra high-hardness steel, and cemented carbide.
The pellets can be made of a transparent material constituting a transparent ballistic structure. For example, the pellets can be made of a materiel selected from the group consisting of transparent soda-lime, transparent borosilicate, transparent aluminum oxide, transparent magnesium aluminum oxide (SPINEL), transparent sapphire and transparent aluminum oxynitride (ALON).
The binder matrix, configured for both attaching the pellet one to the other and for attaching the layers one to the other, can be made of a transparent material. For example, the binder matrix can be made of a thermoset material selected from the group consisting of transparent polyurethane resin (PUR), transparent polyvinyl-butyral (PVB), phenoxy resin and phenolic resin, or of a thermoplastic material such as polycarbonates and polyamides.
The transparent ballistic structure can further comprise a backing layer made of materials selected from the group of a thermoset or a thermoplastic, as listed above. The material of the backing layer can be similar or different from that of the binder matrix.
According to another aspect of the presently disclosed subject matter, there is provided armor module comprising a ballistic structure as described above, and a casing, which can be rigid, enclosing the ballistic structure at least along sidewalls thereof extending between external surfaces of the module that are parallel to the pellet layers.
The casing can be made from a metal (such as aluminum), fiberglass, or Kevlar.
The armor module can further comprise at least one backing layer, which can comprise ballistic fabric. The ballistic fabric can be selected from the group consisting of aramid, fiberglass, and polyethylene.
The backing layer can comprise a hard layer, which can be made from a material selected from the group consisting of high-hardness steel, hard steel, aluminum, and titanium.
At least one sidewall of the casing can be formed with a projecting portion, wherein one of the front and rear pellet layers projects beyond the other and is accommodated within the projecting portion.
The height of the projecting portion can be substantially equal to that of the pellet layer accommodated therewithin.
The projecting portion can be formed such that its width is at least one half of the diameter of one of the pellets, and/or such that its width is no greater than three times the diameter of one of the pellets.
The ballistic structure can comprises semi-circular pellets disposed along edges of the front and rear pellet layers, wherein the edges are adjacent the sidewall formed with the projecting portion.
The armor module can be configured to defeat a WC projectile.
According to a further aspect of the presently disclosed subject matter, there is provided an armor assembly comprising a plurality of armor modules as describe above, wherein the modules are arranged such that projecting portions of adjacent modules overlap one another.
According to a still further aspect of the presently disclosed subject matter, there is provided a vehicle comprising a plurality of armor modules as described above.
According to a still further aspect of the presently disclosed subject matter, there is provided a vehicle comprising an armor assembly as described above.
According to a still further aspect of the presently disclosed subject matter, there is provided a vehicle comprising the transparent ballistic structure as described above.
One or more ballistic structures can constitute one or more windows of the vehicle.
One or more windows can be selected, for example, from the group consisting of side windows, back windows and turret windows.
According to a still further aspect of the presently disclosed subject matter, there is provided a flexible armor comprising a ballistic structure as described above, within a flexible enclosure.
The flexible armor can further comprise one or more flexible fabric layers between the rear pellet layer and the flexible enclosure.
The fabric layers can be sewn together and/or at least partially attached to each other by a flexible adhesive.
The flexible armor can further comprise at least one flexible hinge configured for bending the flexible armor between two adjacent rows thereof, which can facilitate bending of the flexible armor through 180°. The hinge can be made of a strip of flexible material attached to the two adjacent rows of each pellet layer. The hinges can be made of a fabric or elastomeric material, such as aramid, polyester, or rubber.
According to a still further aspect of the presently disclosed subject matter, there is provided a method for producing a ballistic structure as described above, the method comprising:
The method may further comprise introducing an intermediate layer between at least a portion of the front and rear pellet layers.
The method may further comprise providing a casing, wherein the front fabric layer is arranged within the casing.
The method may further comprise producing an armor module as described above.
In order to understand the presently disclosed subject matter and to see how it can be carried out in practice, embodiments will now be described, by way of non-limiting examples only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
As illustrated in
As best seen in
The pellets 14 can be made of any high density material used in ballistic protection, for example, against small-arms fire such as ball-type and armor-piercing projectiles, such as ballistic ceramics. Preferably the material can be alumina, silicon carbide. However, other material can be used, for example, the boron carbide, ultra high-hardness steel (UHH), cemented carbide (hard metal), or any other suitable material. The materials of the pellets 14 of the two layers can be different from each other. In particular, the pellets 14 of the front pellet layer 12a can be harder than those of the rear pellet layer 12b. However, it will be appreciated that the reverse can be the case, and the pellets both layers 12 can be made of the same material. In addition, while each layer 12 typically comprises pellets 14 made of a single material, each can comprise pellets made of different materials.
The two layers 12a and 12b of the pellets 14 can be held together in one common binder matrix or can each comprise its own matrix and be assembled, so that the pellets heights define a common thickness of the two layers. In any case, the two layers are held and/or assembled so as that their movement relative to each other is prevented at least in the directions perpendicular to their thickness direction.
The material of the matrix can be any suitable solid or flexible adhesive material, including, but not limited to, a plastic adhesive, including thermosetting and thermoplastic materials, such as for example, polyurethane, polyester, and epoxy.
The pellets 14 can be made of a transparent material, such as glass, and held in a transparent binder matrix, to allow obtaining an essentially transparent ballistic armor structure for ballistic protection of those parts of armored vehicles where at least some amount of vision is required.
A transparent binder matrix, which can be made of a castable transparent polymer resin, can be used to adhere the pellets 14 to each other and to attach the armor to a surface to be protected, such as, for example, a window of a vehicle.
In case the ballistic structure 10 is further provided with an intermediate layer between the layers 12a and 12b, as will be further described with reference to
Each layer in the transparent ballistic structure as described above, can be produced, for example, in accordance with “Pellets-in-PUR (polyurethane resin)” concept, as described by Carton and Brooks in “Innovative Transparent Amour Concepts” (26th International Symposium on Ballistics, Miami, Fla., Sep. 12-16, 2011).
The transparent ballistic armor further comprises a transparent backing layer, made of a material similar or different of that of the binder matrix.
The transparent ballistic structure can be a stand-alone product configured to replace an existing transparent surface.
Although the pellets of each layer are shown to be in contact with each other, it will be appreciated that this does not necessarily need to be the case.
The pellets 14 can be coated, e.g., with a material improving their adhesion to the matrix (such as for example the primer as disclosed in the Applicant's IL 169230) or to provide the pellets with some other desired properties.
Each pellet 14 can be formed as a core surrounded by a belt member 81 configured for confining the pellet and made of a rigid material different from that of the core.
The belt member 81 mounted on the pellets 14, as shown in
It will be appreciated that in the above described arrangements, and other similar arrangement wherein the pellets 14 or the pellet units (each including a pellet and a belt member mounted thereon as described above) are designed to be in contact with adjacent pellets or pellet units, respectively, should be considered as ‘being in contact’ even though they are not in direct contact each with another, as an artifact of the manufacturing process.
The pellets are arranged to form a “honeycomb” pattern, wherein most of the pellets 14 (expect for those on the periphery) are surrounded by six adjacent pellets. As illustrated in
With reference to
With this arrangement, though the rows of set 20 of the rear layer are fully aligned with the rows of set 20 of the front layer, the pellets 14 in these rows in one of the layers are offset as described above, relative to the pellets 14 of these rows in the other layer, the rows of the sets 19 and 21 of the one of the layers being thus off-set relative to the corresponding rows of the other. Staggering the front and rear layers 12a and 12b as described above results in points of contact 24 between adjacent pellets 14 in the rows of the set 20 in one of the layers overlapping centers 26 of the pellets in the corresponding rows in the other layer (it will be appreciated that as in the plan-view depiction of
The above described arrangement ensures that all spaces 22 between adjacent pellets 14 of each pellet layer are overlapped by the area of the other layer that is free of such spaces.
As shown for example in
The intermediate layer 13 can support the front and rear pellet layers 12a, 12b, for example by providing structural confinement. In addition, it can reduce shockwave propagation between the front and rear pellet layers 12a, 12b. With the thickness of the intermediate layer 13 being S (
The ballistic structure 10 as described above can provide a high degree of ballistic protection, with a relatively low weight. For example, it can provide a degree of protection equal or similar to that provided by a similarly designed armor having a single layer of pellets, while having a weight per unit area which is about 80%-90% thereof. In particular, it has been surprisingly uncovered that, to provide the same degree of protection in an armor having such single layer of pellets, the pellets need to have a height greater than the total height the two layers described above.
In addition, the ballistic structure 10 can provide protection not available when a single layer of pellets is used. In such single layer structure, as illustrated in
The ballistic structure 10 as described above with reference to
It will further be appreciated that although the ballistic structure 10 is described above as comprising individual pellets 14, the pellet layers 12 may be constructed using various other structures which give rise to protected areas surrounded by spaces, without departing from the scope of the presently disclosed subject matter, mutatis mutandis. Examples of such armor are described, for example, in EP 2 023 072, and in PCT application PCT/EP10/058,520.
The ballistic structure 10 can be utilized as part of an add-on armor. As illustrated in
As illustrated in
It will be appreciated that the add-on armor module 30 as described above with reference to
It will be appreciated that in the accompanying figures, different layers are represented by different types of lines of varying thicknesses. However, the thicknesses of these lines do not necessarily correspond to the thicknesses of the layers which they represent. Thus, for example, several fabric layers can be represented in the accompanying figures by several spaced apart lines, which total thickness approaches that of the ballistic structure, which in reality the ballistic structure can be much thicker than the fabric layers.
Alternatively, the ballistic structure 10 as described above with reference to
As illustrated in
Binder matrix material can permeate the backing 44. The fabric layers can be made of any suitable ballistic fabric, including, but not limited to, aramid, polyethylene, and fiberglass.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
The width W of the projecting portion 52 in the plan view of the structure 10 can be no less than about half the diameter of a pellet 14, e.g., when made of semi-circular pellets, and can be up to about three times the diameter of a pellet, although it can be even wider. In any event, the width W of the projecting portion 52 should be designed so as to support an arrangement of modules 30, 38 as illustrated in
Providing modules 30, 38 such as described above provides several advantages. For example, the armor assembly 75 can be assembled to any desired size from prefabricated parts. In addition, in the event that several pellets are damaged, e.g., due to impact of projectiles, the module containing the damaged pellets can be easily replaced, without having to replace the entire assembly.
The ballistic structure 10 can be used as part of a flexible body armor. As illustrated in
As illustrated in
The flexible enclosure 64 can be formed as a sack of dimensions suitable to accommodate therewithin the ballistic structure 10 and fabric layer 66, as well as any other layers or elements which can be provided. It can be made of any suitable material which provides ballistic protection, such as aramid. Alternatively, it can be made of a material which offers no ballistic protection, such as polyester, cotton, etc. Appropriate accessories (not illustrated), such as snaps, buttons, straps, etc., can be provided in order to fasten, adjust, etc. the body armor 62 on the wearer.
The pellet layers 12 of the ballistic structure 10 can be free to change shapes relative to one another, e.g. when bended, without moving parallel to each other. Such an arrangement imparts flexibility to the layers.
This can be accomplished by providing them substantially free of bonds directly therebetween (they may, however, be attached along at least portions of their peripheries, and/or they can be both attached to a single element along at least a portion of their peripheries). Such an arrangement allows the pellet layers 12 to remain adjacent one another while remaining flexible. This can also be accomplished by attaching them together at select portions of their adjacent surfaces. For example, the pellet layers 12 can be connected to one another along a line running along a centerline thereof. Although the areas of the pellet layers 12 which are close to the point or area of attachment have limited movement with respect to one another, overall, the ballistic structure 10 can together retain a high degree of flexibility.
In addition, the binder matrix is made out of a flexible material.
As such, and as illustrated in
The fabric layer 66 can comprise a plurality of sub-layers 70 of ballistic fabric. The ballistic fabric can be aramid, polyethylene, fiberglass, or any other suitable material. The sub-layers 70 can be sewn together and un-pressed, in order to maintain a high degree of flexibility of the fabric layer 66.
According to a modification illustrated in
The hinges 65 can be made of a flexible material, for example a fabric such as aramid or polyester, or an elastomer such as natural or artificial rubber, or of any other suitable material. The flexible material of the hinges can be more flexible than the binder matrix. According to the illustrated example, each hinge comprises a strip of material attached to ends of two adjacent rows of pellets 14. Such an arrangement can allow bending of the body armor 62 through an angle up to 180° (i.e., the final disposition of the two adjacent rows represents a rotation of 180° from the original, un-bended, disposition thereof). In the event, for example, that the hinges 65 are made out of an elastomeric material, the hinges can allow bending up to 180° in one direction, and somewhat in the other direction. The degree of bending allowed in the other direction depends on a several factors including, but not limited to, the material of the hinge 65 and the distance between adjacent pellets 14 in the pellet layer 12.
In order to facilitate bending of the ballistic structure 10, hinges 65 can be provided in corresponding rows in adjacent pellet layers 12, i.e., a hinge can be provided on rows of the rear pellet layer 12b below those on which a hinge is provided on the front pellet layer 12a, in order to allow both pellet layers to bend together, such as illustrated in
A single row of pellets 14 can be attached to a hinge 65 on its front and rear sides, with the front-facing hinge being attached to an adjacent row on one side thereof, and the rear-facing hinge being attached to an adjacent row on the other side thereof. It will be appreciated that the binder matrix between adjacent rows of pellet 14 attached to a single hinge 65 can be broken or weakened to allow for the bending.
The hinges 65 can be attached during formation of the pellet layers 12 or thereafter.
It will be appreciated that an armor similar in design to the body armor 62 can be provided in shapes which make it suitable for other uses, such as wrapping part of vehicles or articles to provide ballistic protection therefor.
The ballistic structure 10 can be manufactured as follows:
The pellets 14 are prepared by cleaning with a surface preparation chemical agent. They are then coated with one or more coats of primer, such as Silan, or any other suitable bonding agent. The coating can be accomplished by spraying the pellets 14 with the primer, or by immersion thereof in a bath of the primer. The spraying can be accomplished by standing the pellets 14 on their rear ends 18b, spraying the primer thereon, and allowing them to dry. This coats all surfaces except the rear ends 18b. When the pellets 14 are later arranged for production with their rear ends facing upward, as described below, the primer is applied to the rear ends 18b, thereby ensuring that the entire surface of each pellets 14 is coated therewith. Alternatively, the entire surface of the pellets 14 can be coated prior to their arrangement for production. The primer can be applied manually or in an automated fashion.
A non-limiting description of a process which can be employed for manufacturing armor as above will be presented below with reference to
As illustrated in
Binder material in powder or liquid form is introduced in the mold 72 to fill the gaps between the pellets and fully cover them, including the planar rear ends 18b thereof. The binder matrix is adapted to bind the pellets 14 to each other and to the adjacent layers.
As seen in
Subsequently, the rear pellet layer 12b is formed on top of the intermediate layer 13 (if no intermediate layer is provided, then the rear pellet layer is formed immediately on top of the front pellet layer 12a). In the event that one or more fabric backing layers are provided, suitable ballistic fabric is provided on top of the rear pellet layer 12b, similar to that described with reference to the intermediate fabric layer 13. If a backing 44 is provided, it is placed above the rear pellet layer 12b.
Each of the fabric layers, if provided, can be pre-impregnated with the binder matrix.
As seen in
The heating expands the mold 72, which allows the pellets 14, which heretofore have been held in contact with one another, to separate slightly by the binder material, whether a thermoplastic or thermoset, at this stage in liquid form, drawn by the primer in-between the pellets 14. When the binder material solidifies, there is produced a gap of 0.1 and 0.3 mm between adjacent pellets 14 at their closest points. This gap contains the primer and the binder material. The presence of the binder between adjacent pellets 14 improves ballistic protection of the armor by reducing propagation of shockwaves through the armor upon impact by a projectile and lessening the effect of shattering pellets on those adjacent thereto.
It will be appreciated that the method of manufacture described above with reference to
The processes described above can be modified by manufacturing each pellet layer 12 separately.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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210014 | Dec 2010 | IL | national |